Record Plant
Record Plant (also The Record Plant ) is the name of originally three well-known recording studios in New York City , Los Angeles and Sausalito in California . Artists who recorded in the studios include John Lennon , Queen , Aerosmith , Bruce Springsteen , Frank Zappa and Jimi Hendrix , among others .
history
The studio in New York City was opened by Gary Kellgren and Chris Stone in the spring of 1968. One of the first sessions were the recording of the album Electric Ladyland by The Jimi Hendrix Experience , which emerged from June to August 1968 at Studio A. After the cable broadcaster TeleVision Communications (TVC) took over the studios in New York, a second studio was opened in Los Angeles just a year later. In 1972 the studio in Sausalito was added. Studio founder Kellgren died in 1977. The following year, Studio C was destroyed in a fire. In 1987, the former Beatles producer and co-owner of the Chrysalis group , George Martin , took over the studios. While the studio in Los Angeles continues under the name The Record Plant, the New York studio closed in 1987 and the one in Sausalito in 2008.
The studios are very keen to create a comfortable atmosphere for the artists. Kellgren in particular relied on pleasant studios instead of clinical rooms.
Producers and sound engineers
- Gary Kellgren (Co-Founder, Producer and Sound Engineer)
- Shelly Yakus (sound engineer)
- Roy Cicala (sound engineer)
- Ray Colcord (producer)
- Jack Douglas (producer)
- Jimmy Iovine (sound engineer and producer)
- Jay Messina (producer)
- Jimmy Robinson (producer and sound engineer)
- Sam Ginsberg (sound engineer)
Selected albums
Web links
- Record Plant Recording Studios: Official Homepage. Retrieved August 21, 2012 .